Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die discussion

note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
10689 views
Archives > Which LIST book did you just finish?

Comments Showing 2,151-2,200 of 7,921 (7921 new)    post a comment »

message 2151: by Stacie (new)

Stacie | 140 comments Lauli wrote: "Just finished "Foucault's Pendulum". I didn't think I would, it was really hard to get going. I liked the ending, though. It should be 300 pages shorter."

I am kind of bummed to hear it wasn't that good. I have wanted to read it for years and FINALLY bought it.


message 2152: by Emma (new)

Emma (mnium) | 135 comments Anna Karenina

I had tried to read this one before and don't remember why I put it down but this time I was reading it for some time on Kindle for iPhone. I enjoyed its psychological realism but the etext wasn't edited too well and that was distracting.

And in general, I think I need to pay more attention to the translations I choose.


message 2153: by Linda (new)

Linda Deanne wrote: "...read the Kite Runner, what a fantastic book, why is this not on the list?"

I also just finished this book and really loved it - need I say it included more details and was better than the movie? I also think it should be on the List!




message 2154: by Linda (new)

Linda Amanda wrote: "The Violent Bear it Away by Flannery O'Connor. Umm...what? That's a weird lady, right there."

I'm just getting ready (with anticipation) to start Wise Blood by O'Connor. I've read several of her short stories - definitely strange, but thought-provoking!



message 2155: by Magdalena (new)

Magdalena (doffka) | 8 comments Tess of the D'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy


message 2156: by Deborah (new)

Deborah | 1 comments I just finished Trainspotting - crazy!


message 2158: by Elaine (new)

Elaine What did you think of it? I stopped about 1/3 of the way in, but am going to finish it at some time.


message 2159: by Princess (new)

Princess  Peach (annabananafish) | 7 comments Wuthering Heights! Loved it


message 2160: by Elaine (new)

Elaine Anna wrote: "Austerlitz | W.G. Sebald"
What did you think of it? I stopped about 1/3 of the way in, but am going to finish it some time



message 2161: by Gerald (new)

Gerald Camp (gerryc) | 75 comments Sharron wrote: "Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell. Loved it, gave it 5 stars."

Sharon,
Can you write a review of this without giving anything away?




message 2162: by Anna (new)

Anna (lilfox) | 290 comments Elaine wrote: "Anna wrote: "Austerlitz | W.G. Sebald"
What did you think of it? I stopped about 1/3 of the way in, but am going to finish it some time
"


It was a little bit complicated. I had problem with guessing who is talking. For me the narrator was speaking through Austerlitz. Or maybe it was Austerlitz talking through the narrator?



message 2163: by Susan (new)

Susan  (seg4me) I just finished Everything Is Illuminated. I thought it was amazing.


message 2164: by Kristi (new)

Kristi (kristilarson) | 263 comments I finished North and South last night. I really liked it overall, but I didn't exactly like the heroine. I definitely need to watch the BBC version.


message 2165: by Anthony (new)

Anthony DeCastro | 168 comments I just finished Wise Blood by Flannery O'Connor


message 2166: by Cindy (new)

Cindy (newtomato) | 195 comments I finished Where Angels Fear To Tread - it's on the original 2006 list. It's not that great; I'm glad it was removed from the 2008 list.


message 2167: by Gini (new)

Gini | 138 comments The House of the Seven Gables. I know it was influential as sort of the beginning of Gothic Horror, and it was entertaining, but mostly for being twee and ham-handed. Very Snidely Whiplash villain, lots of *gasp* last minute revelations, and not much substance through most of the book.


message 2168: by Lauli (new)

Lauli | 263 comments "The Poisonwood Bible" by Barbara Kingsolver


message 2170: by Yrinsyde (new)

Yrinsyde | 295 comments Buddenbrokks and Things Fall Apart. Wow - both are so powerful and moved me for different reasons. I'd recommend both.

I'm excited to learn that there is a new Buddenbrooks movie to be released in Germany next month!


message 2171: by Gini (new)

Gini | 138 comments Finished The Sound and the Fury and Veronika Decides to Die. Faulkner is an angry dude....


message 2172: by Lauli (new)

Lauli | 263 comments Gini wrote: "Finished The Sound and the Fury and Veronika Decides to Die. Faulkner is an angry dude...."

Yeah, but what beautiful anger! How did you like Coelho? Personally, I hate his guts!


message 2173: by Elaine (new)

Elaine Susan G wrote: "I just finished Everything Is Illuminated. I thought it was amazing."

Yes it was!


message 2174: by Elaine (new)

Elaine I've just finished "The mercy killers" by Lisa Reardon and "Middlemarch" by George Eliot. Both amazing!


message 2175: by Gini (new)

Gini | 138 comments Lauli wrote: "Yeah, but what beautiful anger! How did you like Coelho? Personally, I hate his guts!"

Faulkner's use of language is amazing. I find him hard to read, though, because he exhausts me.

This was my first Coelho. I didn't hate it; the message was a bit facile, and I am not really keen on his apparent view of the morality of the doctor's action. But I am a little perplexed as to why it's on the list when other, better authors are unrepresented.


message 2176: by Meera (new)

Meera I just finished The Woman in White. Highly entertaining.


message 2177: by Linda (new)

Linda jf The Nine Tailors by Sayers. Very unique cause of death there.


message 2178: by Julia (new)

Julia (jujulia) | 37 comments The Woman in White as well......enjoyed it especially in the first part where the characters are introduced, less in the second part which is more plot-driven....still, it's definitely a page-turner, especially for people who - unlike myself - like mysteries.....


message 2179: by Lauli (new)

Lauli | 263 comments I've just finished "Pepita Jiménez" from the new list. Lukewarm. I'm not that fond of this kind of Romantic novel where the characters are so flat and so good and so stereotypical. It bores me a bit. The only thing that redeems it for me is Juan Valera's narrative technique, mixing the epistolar novel in the style of De Laclos or Goethe, with omniscient narration and editorial intrusions. But the story itself is pretty much a bore.


message 2180: by Jose (last edited Nov 30, 2009 01:59PM) (new)

Jose Luna | 3 comments Blood Meridian. Yes, would read it again. Of the list, which is like it? Not most like it, but with a character like Judge Holden, and with an esoteric vocabulary that escaped being able to look the words up.


message 2181: by Mark (new)

Mark Gelula (mgelula) | 3 comments I too have read Blood Meridian (as well as four other McCormac books). Your observation about the author's esoteric vocabulary sat well with me. I found I too had to give up searching meanings. But the Judge as a symbolic character is quite intriguing. Was he Satan incarnate?


message 2182: by Stacie (new)

Stacie | 140 comments Les Miserables


message 2183: by Judith (new)

Judith (jloucks) | 1202 comments I finished "Far From the Madding Crowd" by Hardy and "The Feast of the Goat" by Llosa.


message 2184: by Julia (new)

Julia (jujulia) | 37 comments How did you like "The Feast of the Goat"? i'm quite a fan of Mario Vargas Llosa, but i honestly like other books better than this one - maybe they've included it as a great example of a novel on dictatorship? i found it a little bit boring and the plot against the Trujillo was described excruciatingly slow - reminded me of the schemes necessary for getting on with the marriage between Mario and his aunt in Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter which was also the part i had to fight with in this otherwise highly entertaining book.


message 2185: by Pollopicu (last edited Dec 01, 2009 04:30PM) (new)

Pollopicu I just finished A Tale of Two Cities


message 2186: by Kristi (new)

Kristi (kristilarson) | 263 comments Just finished The Awakening. I really liked it. I thought the writing was beautiful. Of course, it was a bit depressing, but the reality of it made it beautiful.


message 2187: by Pollopicu (new)

Pollopicu Kristi, my friend and I just found two copies of The Awakening in a box on my street and brought them home. Now I want to read it.


message 2188: by M (new)

M (masanobu) | 110 comments Rachel wrote: "I just finished A Tale of Two Cities"

I loved that book.


message 2189: by Lauli (new)

Lauli | 263 comments Just finished Cry, the Beloved Country. I liked it very much, and was surprised by how hopeful it is, although I am a bit skeptical about the real chances that the characters have of finding happiness and stability. It's sad to read a story like that fifty years after it was written and discover that most of the writer's hopes have not yet come true.


message 2190: by Judith (new)

Judith (jloucks) | 1202 comments Julia wrote: "How did you like "The Feast of the Goat"? i'm quite a fan of Mario Vargas Llosa, but i honestly like other books better than this one - maybe they've included it as a great example of a novel on di..."

Julia, I gave the book three out of five stars. My greatest difficulty came at the beginning, being thrown so many names and street names in Spanish that I had no background for. I struggled to get through the first third, mostly for that reason and that nothing much was happening. I liked the rest of the book as I can be a stickler for detail when it falls in the historical fiction category. Accurate or not (and I supposed this time it was pretty true to events), the detail adds to the credibility of the version of events being described.

I have heard of others who say this is not his best work; but there are so many books on dictatorships to choose from, I don't know why Boxall et al picked this one by Llosa.

I will read his other works as I come across them though, but this was my first one by the author.


message 2191: by Lauli (new)

Lauli | 263 comments Judith wrote: "Julia wrote: "How did you like "The Feast of the Goat"? i'm quite a fan of Mario Vargas Llosa, but i honestly like other books better than this one - maybe they've included it as a great example of..."

I recommend "The Time of the Hero" and "Captain Pantoja and the Special Service". They are not in the 1001 book list, but I think it's Vargas Llosa at his best. Unfortunately, being a Spanish speaker myself, I don't know how much of his style is lost in translation, but he is definitely my favourite Latin American writer.


message 2192: by Julia (new)

Julia (jujulia) | 37 comments Thanks, Judith, muchas gracias, Lauli, I've read "The time of the hero" and really liked it, still my all-time fav by Vargas Llosa is "The green house".....i honestly prefer his less recent books like the ones mentioned above or "Conversation in the Cathedral" or "Who killed Palomino Molero?" to the newer ones, even though i did like "Los cuadernos de don Rigoberto".....i adore how he weaves together different strands of narration, but sometimes it's demanding to follow the characters and plots when Vargas Llosa changes their names and the setting from one chapter to the next...still, one of my favourite authors ever.


message 2193: by Denise (new)

Denise | 231 comments Rachel said: ...my friend and I just found two copies of The Awakening in a box on my street and brought them home. Now I want to read it.

That's a teaser to a story. What exactly were those two books doing in a box on your street?




message 2194: by Pollopicu (new)

Pollopicu There's a second-hand store that puts books out for free. Grab and go.


message 2195: by Deanne (new)

Deanne | 681 comments Finished The Magic Mountain by Mann, really enjoyed the story and became emersed in the lives of the characters.


message 2196: by Magdalena (last edited Dec 04, 2009 01:36PM) (new)

Magdalena (doffka) | 8 comments Bonjour Tristesse
not bad... but too short! and i really like the ending especially that i imagined that it in quite different way ( ;


message 2197: by Chel (new)

Chel | 380 comments I just finished Animal's People. has a very bold and, at times, witty style. It also has its tragic elements. It is also socially conscious on an issue and makes one think.


message 2198: by Linda (new)

Linda Just finished Wise Blood by O'Connor. Really strange, like I expected it to be. Not sure I understood it.


message 2199: by Kerlip Bintang (last edited Dec 08, 2009 01:20AM) (new)

Kerlip Bintang Hmmm.. I have just finished read "Smurf" by Peyo. And still smiling now :)


message 2200: by Gerald (new)

Gerald Camp (gerryc) | 75 comments Hi Chel,
I thought Animal's People was a fascinating book--very moving and thought provoking. Definitely deserves its place on 1001 Books . . .
Gerry


back to top
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.